San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Town looks to museum of faith for its revival

- By Catherine Pepinster

BISHOP AUCKLAND, England — The town’s name is a reminder of its history as the county seat of the bishop of Durham, one of England’s most powerful clerics. But by the end of the last century, Bishop Auckland had become a shadow of its former self, with shops on its main street boarded up, the nearby coal pits closed down and work hard to come by. But now a remarkable experiment is underway — to revive the fortunes of this northern England town through a combinatio­n of art and religion. And the final piece in its regenerati­on — a Faith Museum — opened its doors for the first time earlier this month.

Britain has plenty of medieval cathedrals and ancient monuments, but the Faith Museum is the first of its kind solely dedicated to telling the story of the country’s religious faith. And it is a dramatic story — tumultuous, often violent and always tied closely to the country’s own identity and place in the world. The museum has items highlighti­ng the birth of Christiani­ty under Roman rule, the power of the medieval monasterie­s, the polarizing effects of the Reformatio­n, the growth of dissenting Christian traditions, the challenge of science to faith and the religious diversity of today.

The Faith Museum is the brainchild of one of Britain’s richest men, city of London investment banker Jonathan Ruffer, who was raised not far from Bishop Auckland. He has spent the last 10 years creating what he calls the Auckland Project, a series of museums, galleries, parks and other attraction­s.

Ruffer, who first became an active Christian at Cambridge University in the late 1960s, says the Auckland Project would never have come about if he had not undertaken an eight-day Ignatian silent retreat 10 years ago.

“It was simply supposed to be a wash and brush up, but

when I was there I was mugged (by God), challenged to turn my life into one that was working with the voiceless wherever I chose. Being unimaginat­ive, I thought it best to return to my roots here.”

Ruffer recalls that during the retreat, people staying at the Jesuit house in Wales were told at the start that a priest and a kitchen worker were ill. Each day, they were given updates on the priest but not on the kitchen worker. He was shocked.

“I found myself shaking my fist and saying to God, ‘Who’ll look after the little person?’ The answer came straight back. So that’s a dangerous question to ask,” Ruffer says.

“It was clear it was

what I was called to do. The key was accepting what it was. I always define it as an Abrahamic call, in that I was clearly being sent on a journey, and, like Abraham, I wasn’t vouchsafed the destinatio­n. I really have spent years not knowing what I was doing.”

There is no sense in Bishop Auckland that Ruffer was clueless. Rather, he has responded to opportunit­y.

While he was looking for something to do that would make a difference, the Church Commission­ers, who look after the Church of England’s money, were at the same time looking to offload a set of paintings — “Jacob and His Twelve Sons,” by the Spanish master Zurbarán. They had been purchased in 1757 by Richard Trevor, bishop of Durham, and had since been displayed in the dining room of the bishop of Durham’s castle in Bishop Auckland.

Ruffer has a particular passion for Spanish art and a substantia­l collection of his own, which now forms the collection in another of the town’s new museums — Bishop Auckland’s Spanish Gallery, filled with works by Spanish Old Masters, including Velazquez, El Greco and Murillo.

Although he was attracted to the idea of taking on the Zurbarán masterpiec­es, negotiatio­ns with the Church Commission­ers were fraught. The Zurbaráns came with the castle, and they wanted £15 million. Ruffer says he never wanted to take on a building — “I don’t like them, I’m frightened of them” — and viewed the castle as a liability that needed considerab­le repair.

At one point he walked

away from the deal but was drawn back, he says, by the then-bishop of Durham’s efforts. Justin Welby, now archbishop of Canterbury, brought about reconcilia­tion between him and the commission­ers — a venture that partly involved meeting in a peace yurt at a church in the city of London. After first offering £15 million for the Zurbarán, he finally secured the castle and the pictures for £11 million.

The Zurbaráns remained in the castle dining room — where visitors can now see the biblical figures of Jacob and his sons, once purchased by Bishop Trevor to publicly show his support for Jewish naturaliza­tion rights at a time when the British Parliament was debating them. And the castle itself became the locus for the Faith Museum, which now occupies a separate old part of the castle, as well as a new extension built for the museum.

Ruffer says the Spanish Gallery reflects ideas of transience and eternity. While it also reflects his

personal passion for the art of the Spanish Baroque, he says it is the newly opened Faith Museum that is closest to his heart.He says he is not on a mission to proselytiz­e with the Faith Museum, but rather to explain.

“I do think that what we are trying to do here hasn’t been done before. It hasn’t been tried because it is impossible in an age when there is such an animus against people with faith, and those with faith are often vituperati­ve toward others with faith.”

The Museum begins with a gallery tracing the origins of faith in Britain from 6,000 years ago and ends with contempora­ry artists and their personal responses to faith. In between are timelines and accounts of the dramatic twists and turns of faith in Britain and a collection of more than 250 objects from private and personal collection­s across Britain, many on loan as the Faith Museum works to build its own collection.

Among the highlights is a never-before-displayed object found less than a mile from the castle: the Binchester Ring. The silver ring was discovered during an excavation in 2014 at Binchester Roman Fort, and its carved carnelian stone inscribed with an anchor and fish is rare early evidence of Christiani­ty in Britain.

A number of items on display highlight the various religious conflicts in Britain’s history, particular­ly the Reformatio­n. An altar cover made from fragments of embroidere­d blue velvet, likely created after 1600 from vestments worn by pre-Reformatio­n priests, symbolizes efforts to preserve the Catholic faith. There is also a 1535 document listing the annual incomes of 160 monasterie­s around Britain, after Henry VIII decided to tax them. Eventually he had them dissolved.

There is a rare example of William Tyndale’s English translatio­n of the New Testament — a translatio­n that led to his execution for heresy in 1536. Also on display is a wooden pulpit from 1760, from which the Methodist preacher John Wesley spoke when he visited the north of England.

A number of items in the museum point to the history of Christian charity in the country, including a set of brass musical instrument­s made at the Salvation Army’s own musical instrument factory.

The presence of other religions in Britain is also highlighte­d in the displays, including the 13thcentur­y Bodleian Bowl, an early example of evidence of Jewish communitie­s in Britain. There are also the prayer beads of Lord Headley, the first convert to Islam in Britain, who became a Muslim in 1913.

 ?? Photo by Catherine Pepinster via RNS ?? Visitors view items at the Faith Museum in Bishop Auckland, northern England.
Photo by Catherine Pepinster via RNS Visitors view items at the Faith Museum in Bishop Auckland, northern England.

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